Screaming From The Rooftop

Monday, February 16, 2015

A diner in Hell’s Kitchen isn’t usually the place one would expect a perfect first date to take place. And yet it was. There on 9th Avenue between 43rd and 44th I met a man that I had only texted with prior. And from the moment I laid eyes on him I couldn’t stop staring. He was unconventionally perfect, his hair was pristinely out of place, his sweater was fitted but revealing, his eyes were piercing but soft.

He smiled, I smirked. He spoke, I swooned. He laughed, I blushed. He told me of his life and his growing up, his job and his dreams. He had a burger, I had cake. There wasn’t one shred of pretense or a single awkward pause. When the conversation dipped, the eyes remained fixed. In one look – one singular look – he awakened feelings in me that I had long thought dead. He renewed boyhood lust and puppy love.

And my God, when the boy smiled…

I haven’t been able to stop thinking about him today. In fact I haven’t been able to do much except only think about him. I try to play the game, to refrain from contacting him and telling him just what I feel, every single bit of every insane intense attraction I am experiencing. I try to play it cool, to remain calm, to pretend that every inch of my being isn’t screaming to be with him. Surely these are the baser of attractions. Surely these are the desires meant for the younger and ill-informed. Surely a man my age should know better. Surely I need to think with my mind and shut down my heart.

But I can’t. So I text him. And I tell him just what my mind says not to. I explain it all, put it all on the table, I acknowledge that it’s not rational and not cool and I know this isn’t the way the game is played. But I can’t stop. I can’t stop thinking about him. I tell him that I don’t know what tomorrow will bring but I want tomorrow to include him. I know love at first sight is silly and I know that’s not what this is and I know that I don’t know one damn thing anymore. That’s the only thing I know.

And I wait. And the response doesn’t come.

Finally he says he’s busy, and that it just doesn't feel quite right. I can’t catch my breath. I sink into the chair, my mind spins, and I realize that we’re not at the same place; his feet are firmly planted on earth and I am floating somewhere in the stratosphere. I realize that what I believed was fate was just a one-sided blizzard of emotions, of irrational hopes built on the foolish childhood fantasy that posits love is possible after one chance encounter.

What was I thinking? How could I have been so stupid? Why did I let my heart get the best of me when I knew? I fucking knew! It made no sense and I knew it made no sense. Next time, Jon-Marc, next time shut down those feelings before they begin. Next time don’t let your heart lead. Next time be rational. Next time play the game. Next time don’t allow what you know isn’t real to guide what you know is. And what you know is that love doesn’t blossom from one date. That you know! Next time. Next time...

Then it hit me. It was irrational and it was insane and it was exactly the opposite of everything I know to be real. But it was real. It was as real as the air I breathe. For a brief moment I experienced every emotion I thought I had neatly buried for the sake of adulthood.

And it felt good. Hell, it felt fantastic. It was the stirring and the flying and the complete opposite of everything we’re told to feel. None of it made sense and that was the beauty of it. It’s not supposed to make sense. Love and lust and everything in between rarely make sense. Sometimes - just sometimes - we’re supposed to allow ourselves to experience what doesn’t make a shred of sense, what doesn’t fit into the neat little boxes in which we’re taught to conform. Sometimes running towards what doesn’t make sense at the expense of what does might not be the only choice we have but it is the only choice that's right. And sometimes it ends horribly or just not the way we envisioned. And sometimes that’s ok.

So the boy with the smile that melted my heart wasn’t ready to have mine melt his. And I’d be lying if I said it doesn’t hurt. But every second of the hurt is worth it for the knowledge that the indescribable something deep within still beats, that my ability to fall so irrationally and giddily in whatever it was I was falling in isn’t just the stuff of yesteryear. It was worth it. It was so worth it. And I’d do it all over again if I could. In fact I know I'll do it again. And again, too

Sometimes it’s necessary to not color outside the lines but instead throw out the whole damn coloring book altogether and , with broad brushstrokes, paint loudly and vividly in big, bold, bright letters on the wall “I AM HERE” Sometimes – just sometimes – it’s necessary to rip off the mask of indifference that society tells us to wear, the one that has us play grown up and feign aloof apathy. Sometimes we must scream from the rooftops the raw vulnerability that we have tamped down within for too long. Sometimes we're meant to lose all sense of control.

And sometimes the perfect smile is all you're left with. And sometimes that's perfectly ok.Sometimes...

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

There's nothing unusual about the southwest corner of 9th Ave. and
23rd St.. It's just another corner in an innumerable series of corners
that form whenever two streets meet on the island of Manhattan. I have stood on
that corner at every hour, during every season, under every conceivable variant
of precipitation, through every extreme of temperature, waiting for countless
lights to change, nearly being hit by bikes going the wrong way on the wrong
side of the street. The corner is, as far as corners go, unremarkable.

Until tonight.

Tonight I was waiting for the walk signal when I
heard some commotion to my right. I turned to see a group of six people, all
forming a single file line, with their left hands on the shoulders of the next
except the front two who had walking sticks. These six were all blind. It was
literally the blind leading the blind.

The signal changed, giving me lighted permission
to cross the street. Instead I stayed put. I wanted to see the ones who couldn’t
see as they navigated this corner. I wanted to watch how they made their way,
how they worked as a unit to communicate where they were going and how they
would get there.

It isn’t unusual to see the blind in New York, especially on 23rd.
Selis Manor, a 14 story residence for the visually impaired, sits between
Sixth and Seventh Avenues and its residents navigate the streets with the
aplomb of sighted city dwellers. I have a blind acquaintance that lives in the
building who puts my running ability to shame with the many marathons he has
run. In fact, José’s perception is so attune that you’d not know he was blind
if it weren’t his white cane or guide dog.

What is unusual is seeing a group lined in a row, a full two long avenues
west of Selis Manor, making an effort to cross the street together. They had
apparently just deboarded the Access-A-Ride bus, the City’s paratransit system
that operates to help those with disabilities for whom the subway and standard
buses are not easily accessible (though I’m constantly surprised at the amount
of blind passengers on the subways). The bus driver, who was also on the
corner, did not help them get wherever they were going. And, from all
appearances, the group preferred it that way.

Such an encounter would hardly prompt me to
write an essay. If I wrote a piece for every highly unusual thing I saw, I’d
not have much time for much else. This city, for all its legend and pomp, and
in all its supposed scrubbed-clean-Giuliani-Bloomberg glitz, is still a
uniquely strange place to live. No, it wasn’t the group of six visually
impaired people holding on to each other to get where they were going that led
me to write, though that is truly a remarkable thing to happen upon.

What was remarkable was their joy.

New Yorkers are notorious for their hurried
pace, the seeming speed with which they move to get from one place to the next.
There's a determination in their eyes and God help the person that unknowingly
gets in their way or slows their step. It's a tough city, and its occupants are
hardened to fighting their way to get where they're going. The word ‘joy’ would
scarce be used to describe a typical New Yorker on a typical commute.

Which is why the six
were so remarkable. Not only were they reliant on each other as a group, they
were joyful in their pursuit. When the two leaders with their white canes both
ran into the same trash can at the same time, the group erupted in laughter.

When they realized they needed to
navigate around a light pole, the group heaped words of encouragement and instruction,
one to the other.

When they needed to listen intently to the
sounds of traffic, the group hushed in unified determination.

And each of
the six did each of these things smiling, holding on to each other, never once
snapping or moaning, never once with a hint of giving up.

I wonder
sometimes about my capacity to endure. I often let my mind drift to scenarios
that find me struck blind or deaf or without the use of my extremities. And
just the thoughts of such things strike me with such fear, I can't imagine what
actually living them would do.

But I do know what I do now. I do know when a
group of tourists flank the sidewalk and shorten my gait, I default to anger. I
do know when a person has the audacity to sit in the empty seat next to me on
the subway, I audibly groan. I know that when the trains are late, or the baby
cries, or an elderly man boards -- prompting me to get up, not out of sense of
respect (though there is surely some of that) but out of a sense of wanting the
entire train to see my noble action or at least not see me stay seated -- my
whole demeanor resents every second.

I know that at any given second in any given
morning can turn on nothing more than a funny look from a stranger. I know that
when I ruminate on my life, my ruminations dwell in the messy spots, on all
that is wrong, on all I don’t yet have or haven’t yet experienced. The money is
never enough, the friends are too superficial, the loves too shallow, the needs
too great.

And yet the six without supposed sight turned my
world alight with a lesson on what we do when life doesn’t live up to all that
we expect it should. These six, all smiling, bumping and fumbling on their way,
had more sight than most any sighted person I saw today. And the lesson they
taught me was this:

Be grateful, not for what you have, but for what
you don’t. Be grateful for the friends who will travel with you along roads of
darkness, and be grateful for the ones that won’t. Be grateful for the lack of
money because you’ve seen what it does to those who have it. Be grateful for
disease because the illness taught you things that health never could. Be
grateful for the lack of anything beyond your next breath because it made you
trust in the unseen things that are more real than the air you breathe. Be
grateful that the world didn’t give you anything close to what you had imagined
because what you had imagined was far less than you could ever have dreamed.

Be grateful for blind joyfulness, for the
smiling few who will never see another smile, the ones who laugh when they
stumble and the ones who quiet when the world rushes by. Be grateful for the
six who knew beyond anything I have ever seen how to see things beyond which I
will never know.

And finally, be grateful
for the dark corners. Because there you see glorious, illuminating joy etched
on the faces of a wonder filled few for whom a guiding light is seen, not with
their eyes, but with their hearts.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Editor's note: I wrote this just after the 2013 ING NYC Marathon. It was shared on the facebook page of the marathon and received over 10,000 likes, 1,200 comments, and 600 shares. It was, and remains, a great honor.

At mile 14 I knew. I made the rookie mistake of going out way too fast and, though I knew to slow down, I didn’t. It was all falling apart and there was nothing I could do about it. Though I was still on pace to hit my goal of 3:45:00, at 14 everything shifted. My quads began to tighten, my body stiffened, and all my fears were being realized. I started walking instead of running through fluid stations, the cheers of the crowd were starting to be replaced by the doubts in my mind.

Just past the 24 mile mark I was defeated. I just couldn’t go on. My whole physical being was wrecked and my mind begged me to just give up and give in. And for the love of God let my legs give out. It was over. Maybe next time I will listen and slow down at the beginning and maybe next time I will finish. Not this time though. It’s just too much. That’s what my mind said. The dream wouldn’t be realized this time. Let it go. No shame in quitting.

Don’t quit before the miracle. That’s what they say. Don’t quit before the miracle. Mile 25. Don’t quit before the miracle. Mile 26. Don’t quit before the miracle. Crawl over the finish line if you must, but don’t you dare quit before the miracle.

If I could put into words what yesterday was like, I still couldn’t do it justice. The crowds, those multiplying crowds, their roar as I was making the descent from the Queensboro into Manhattan. Mark Sam and Christopher in Brooklyn, my rock George and his beautiful, gracious, amazing wife Lauren in Queens. The strangers who screamed my name. The thousands upon thousands of kids and adults alike with their hands extended for a high five. The ones that society has labeled ‘disabled’ running and walking and rolling their way to the finish. The signs, the noise makers, the smiles, the bands, every single of the two-million spectators. All these things and then…

And then there they were at mile 17. My Wendy, my gorgeous Wendy who inspires me every single day to be a better person. And my Ric. And my brother, Grant. And my ineffable mom who flew my 92 year old Gran up from Texas just to see me run. There they all were, at mile 17 with signs and screaming for me. You want to know how to make a grown man cry? That’ll do it. If ever there was a memory that will be forever etched in my mind’s eye, that’s it. A tableau of love and heart, of friendship restored and life brought back from the brink of death. A young man for whom a big brother could not be more proud. A mom whose heart has mended mine, a Gran who is one of the few angels among us and who embodies the words service and godliness.

And at 24 when the whole thing was closing in, there was Quentin, whose enthusiasm and pep was what I wish every person could see when crossing their own 24 mile mark. In fact, every person on this earth should be blessed enough to have a Quentin in their lives.

I wish every human being could experience what I experienced yesterday. The marathon was life with all its ups and downs, its indescribable torment, its unbelievable joy, its pain and its overwhelming promise. I wish we all, in everything we do, would think twice when that voice is telling us to quit. I wish for all these things and so much more.

I finished it in 4:17:07, 32 minutes and woefully short of my goal. But I crossed that finish line. I didn’t listen to that voice. Indeed, I didn’t quit before the miracle.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

I sat at a bar on 7th Avenue, just south of Central Park, and watched them go by. It was a perfect day. The temperature was in the mid 50s, the skies were clear, the crowds were festive. And it was New York’s first chance to unite en masse and celebrate their precious and scarred city since the unspeakable tragedy less than two months prior.

I'd been in New York less than 9 months. I, too, lived through that terrible September morning, having lost friends and colleagues, and I grieved for a city that I was gradually learning to call my own. However, as was my wont, I anesthetized the terror with copious amounts of booze. My drinking was always a problem but never more so than just after 9/11. I felt I had carte blanche to act any way I pleased, including drinking myself to oblivion every night. After all, my thinking went, the world was coming to an end so I might as well be blottoed beyond comprehension when it happened.

I’m not sure what came over me that day as I watched those runners. It was surely a bit of envy and awe at how those thousands of men and women pushed through all the pain and agony of not only that day, but the previous days as well. The fact that they trained for countless hours, sacrificed time with family and friends, skipped dates and brunch and, heaven forbid, booze, just for the torment of running 26.2 miles. Why, I thought, would they do such a thing?

I could never do that, I thought. Though I had accomplished many things , most of these things had been in spite of myself. I also failed 95% of anything I ever tried . I rarely finished what I started and had such a penchant for self-sabotage that it was guaranteed if I succeeded at something, shortly thereafter I would thoroughly and completely destroy it .

The proximity of that bar stool to the marathon was not lost on me. Though I was just feet away from the runners, I was many lifetimes away from the run. It was not their world that angered me as much as it was that my world had become so abysmally small. I wanted to be them. I just didn't want to do what it took to get where they were going.

I had dreams, sure, but dreams not pursued are cold reminders of a life not lived. My dreams flourished in my gin soaked mind but brought to bear against the unforgiving morning light that seemed to blister my head, the work necessary to bring those dreams into reality was beyond the reach. At 25 years old I was the town drunk. Life had already passed me by. Every single person who was closely associated with me knew that alcohol was my number one priority and nothing - absolutely nothing - could come between me and the drink. I had come to live by the drink and surely I would die by it too.

As the months became years and I resigned myself, one tumbler after next, to my fate, I never failed to note the marathon. And with each passing year the dream diminished until eventually it became the distant memory of foolish youth. It was a fitting metaphor for my life, a life that was as impossible as the marathon itself.

And then, some years later, in the midst of the most trying time of my existence, as I watched a man I loved more than anything slowly die, as he slipped the bonds of life and my once imperious problems began to seem insignificant, I laced up a pair of running shoes and I started to run. And with the help of friends I trained for my first race of 4 miles. Suddenly I was a runner and though the 26.2 was still the fancy of my drunken fantasy, it was no longer impossible. Running was providing me with the slightest hope in an otherwise hopeless situation. I ran, not to escape life, but instead to be a part of life with all its attendant heartache and despair, in all its glory and brilliance. I ran to be present. I ran to live.

I still struggled with my demons and progress was as intermittent as my sobriety, but no matter how dark my world became, running always provided a glint of sanity. And though faint at times, that glint was often all it took.

July 2012 I began to train for the New York City Marathon. Just weeks out of an eight day hospital stay related to a binge that nearly claimed my life, I was determined to turn the dream into reality. My entry had been guaranteed, my fees had been paid, and the only the thing that came between me and the finish line was getting my body in shape to run the 26.2 miles. Or so I thought.

Training for a marathon is intense. For a November marathon one must start training in the heat and humidity of the summer. There are hundreds of lonely miles, runs in the rain, runs before the sun makes its debut, runs with leg pain and stomach pain and mental anguish, long runs on Sundays that wipe out the entire day. You must rest, and monitor, and gauge, and gu, and learn to listen to your heart and legs and ignore your mind. There are journals to keep and shoes to test. Your running clothes begin to permanently smell like a 6th grade boys' locker room no matter how many odor masking agents you put in the wash, there's a sense of alarm at every creak of a joint or sniffle or sneeze. Ibuprofen is bought in bulk, toenails turn black and fall off, chaffing occurs in crevices on your body you never knew existed. The marathon becomes everything and everything else is just periphery. I ran long runs in Virginia Beach, did speed work on the banks of Lake George, ran 10Ks and 5Ks and half marathons, ran the hills of Washington Heights and the flats of Jersey City.

And then the God damned bottom fell out.

Sandy hit and delivered such a devastating blow that even a city accustomed to catastrophes of cataclysmic proportions was left stunned and knocked aback. As half of Manhattan was left without power and parts of Staten Island and Brooklyn were battered beyond recognition, the city's citizenry began to fight among themselves. And the fighting got nasty...and personal

A marathon, long known for its unifying narrative was now the great divide. People took sides, took to social media to deride their perceived opponents, took to City Hall, took to the airwaves. Each side took the city by storm almost to levels that washed out the storm coverage itself.

Mary Wittenberg, the CEO of New York Road Runners (NYRR), the organization that puts on the marathon, became the storm's bête noire and was demonized and pilloried in ways that you would've thought she was responsible for the storm itself . The anonymity of the internet provided fertile ground for people to threaten runners with tomato and feces pelting should they choose to run the race. Dear friends, people who knew how much the race meant to me, were publicly chastising runners and vehemently staking an anti-marathon position.

And the pro-running crowd wasn't much better. There seemed to be an attitude of indifference or worse towards the suffering millions. They rallied behind trite platitudes like "New Yorkers bounce back from anything" and "The run, like the show, must go on". NYRR, in a decision that can only be described as one of the most tone deaf in recent history, assured the runners that indeed the race would go on and confidently encouraged those traveling to make their planned trips to New York.

Feeling completely deflated, damned if I did, damned if I didn't, I made my way to the Javits Center in midtown where the marathon expo was being held to pick up my bib, t shirt, swag bag etc. My dream race had flipped on its head and was turning into a nightmare. I had no idea what to expect along the marathon route or what us 40,000 runners would encounter. I just knew I was running, as conflicted as I was about that fact.

As I left the expo, my phone rang.

"They cancelled the marathon" Ric, the man whose death sentence had inspired me to run in the first place and whose miraculous recovery I am still at a loss to understand, said. "They're having a press conference. That Mary woman and the mayor, they cancelled it."

"There's no way, Ric! I'm literally standing outside the expo. I just picked up my bib not even five minutes ago. There's no way. They would have told us" I replied in disbelief.

But, alas, it was true. The marathon had been cancelled. Outside that convention center I started to cry like a child who'd just been told there was no Santa Claus. The marathon that I could only dream of years earlier would remain just that, a dream. Though I no longer had to feel conflicted about my decision to run, I grieved the loss of the marathon in ways I still can't explain.

As time went by I was invited to run other marathons. I respectfully declined.

"New York will be my first. I don't know when, but New York will be the first marathon I run. I know it seems silly and doesn't make any sense, but there's a 25 year old guy who has been struggling a while with life and he doesn't believe I can do it. I'm running for him" was my standard answer.

The year since the canceled marathon has not been easy. By every worldly standard, my life seems pretty bleak. I'm still paying, both emotionally and monetarily, for the wreckage of my past. Work comes and goes, the bank account hovers around nothing, I am not sure where Ric, Weezie and I will be living in two weeks time due to the lies of an ex, and homelessness is a very, very real possibility.

But come Sunday....

come Sunday I will make my way, via the Staten Island Ferry, to the foot of the Verrazano and I will toe the line. Come Sunday, I will run New York.

Come Sunday I will run for that 25 year old who said it couldn't be done and for the 37 year old determined to prove him wrong. But I will also run for the others.

Come Sunday I will run for the hopeless, the still sick and suffering, those that will sit on a barstool just feet from the race and think it an impossible feat. I will run for those who ever had a dream but never had it realized. I will run for my mother and my grandmother, both of whom will be among the over two million spectators. I will run for my other grandmother who has spent most of the past year in a nursing home and for my aunt who visits her nearly every day. I will run for the naysayers, the ones who dismiss my running as nothing more than a phase or way to escape, or worse yet, a foolish endeavor in the grand scheme of things. Come Sunday I will run for my father, a man I haven't spoken to in over 4 years and dearly miss. I will run for my brother, who came to New York a few years after me and who is making his dreams a reality on a daily basis. I will run for both my grandfathers who did not live to see the day. I will run for my friend Jack, who died a year ago in a hospital room as Sandy loomed. I will run for George who has taught me in both word and deed how to live one day at a time. Come Sunday I will run for my beloved Wendy who has taught me what unconditional friendship really is and for Quentin, who has taught me that friendship needn't be long in time to be strong in heart. I will run for Amy who has taught me that friendship is at its core about love . I will run for Charles L, who bought me my first pair of running shoes when I couldn't afford to buy them myself. I will run for Helen and Clarissa, two women who are the very essence of the runner's spirit and for my running crew of Richie and Thomas and Daniel, all of whom have pushed me to be a better runner. Come Sunday I will run for Kim, who loved me when I couldn't love myself, and for Rich who has taught me the definition of endurance and perseverance. And I will run for my boys at "the lodge", the ones who show me every Monday, Tuesday and Thursday how to be a better man. I will run for my kindred spirit Marika who was at my first race, and for Michael who was there too. I will run for Ric, my forever and always, who continues to defy the odds and inspires me with his strength.

Come Sunday I will run for the doctors who told me in no uncertain terms I should long be dead.

I will run for every single living creature who is trudging the road of happy destiny along with me.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

I wrote this piece about my grandfather months before he died. I repost today in honor of father's day. I love you Granddaddy, and miss you!

My Grandfather's bible and one of the things I cherish most

As a child I frequently spent the night at my grandparents' house along with three of my cousins who were around my age. Every night after a day of playing and surely some fighting, my grandmother would give us all baths and put us in pajamas. And the pajamas were of the super-hero variety.

They were not Batman or Superman or any of the others. They were my grandfather's old shirts. And as she would pull them over my head I could smell my grandfather's aftershave. There was always comfort in that smell. I was the biggest little boy with his shirt on.

I always knew I was growing up just by where the lower hem of his shirt reached my body. First down to my ankles, then down to my calves, then to the knees. I measured my growth as a boy by the consistency of his size.

And in the morning we would assemble in the breakfast room where my grandmother put together a veritable feast (she always made us menus the night before and we each got to check off what we wanted. And it would always be made just the way we ordered it. Every. Single. Time!). And when I would reach up to give my grandfather a morning hug, I would notice just how strong my Granddaddy was. I measured my strength as a boy by the consistency of his embrace.

And Sunday mornings when he would preach, he would look into the congregation and find his family. And from the pulpit he would ask us to stand. As we stood I would well up with such pride. It was my Granddaddy taking time to say "hello" to me. To me! I measured my pride as a boy by the consistency of his acknowledgment.

And just after 09/11/01, I went to Texas for a three week visit. My grandfather asked if he could take me to lunch. He asked me to recount what that terrible day in September was like. He was the only member of my family to do so. And as I told him the horror he listened intently and said, "You're the only person I know who was there. That took a lot of courage, son. You are a strong young man. I am so proud of you." I measured my worth as a young man by the consistency of his love.

And sometimes in the not so distant future the memories will be all I have. And the day will come and he will leave. And the chains will loosen and he will be set free from the confines of his now frail body. And the man I adored all my life will be before God for whom he lived his life. And the gates will open, the angels will rejoice and my grandfather will enter...measured by the consistency of His grace.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

I was in Texas to visit family as well as run a half-marathon. As I pulled into my grandmother’s driveway I happened to notice a patch of grass in a way I had never noticed it before.You could pull into the circular driveway a thousand times and never notice it. There's no reason to, really. It's meaningless to nearly everyone who passes it, as well it should be. It's a patch of grass as nondescript as any patch you've ever seen. And yet this time when I looked at it, it drew me in and took me back to a time where every memory was worth making and every dream worth having.

We were part of a select club who didn't call her Mrs. Coggin or Carolyn or the pastor's wife or even mom. We were the lucky few who called her Gran. To us, there was no equal. She was, in our eyes, perfect. And though we couldn't have articulated it at the time, we knew God had given her the spirit of a thousand angels and the light of a million suns, and no one in heaven or on earth could ever compare.

And that patch of grass at the edge of the driveway silently tells the story why.

Lemonade stands are not an uncommon part of childhood. Children the world over hang their figurative shingle in front yards and peddle their goodies in the hopes of earning a few bucks to spend as they please.

And if the lemonade stand were the end of the story, or even the beginning of the story, it wouldn't be much of a story at all. But it's not. The lemonade stand stood for something far more than just the table and chairs, the posters and quarter priced drink. It stood for us.

Everyone should be so lucky as to experience the welcome that each grandchild felt upon entering my grandparent's house. No matter what chaos our lives might have been on the outside, when we walked through their door, every problem slipped away and every anxiety vanished. For a child to feel that incredible amount of love only by walking through the door is rare. And to feel that love every single time we did, rarer still.

Spending the night at Gran and Granddaddy's was a paradox of fantastic predictability. We knew what to expect every time. And yet it never once grew boring or redundant or stale. It was our old familiar full of new possibilities.

We knew that we would feast like princes and princesses. We knew every morning upon waking to look under our pillow for a surprise. We knew that every night, before sleeping, Gran would present each of us with a handwritten menu for us to check off what we wanted for breakfast. We knew that every single thing we checked off would be waiting for us the next morning. We knew that we could check off every single thing.

We knew that we'd be given one of my grandfather's oversized shirts to sleep in. We knew that we'd be read a bedtime story. We knew that she'd stay in the room with us until we fell asleep. We knew that we'd try and pretend to be asleep until she left the room. We knew we rarely succeeded in doing so.

We knew that if we asked and she could do it, it would get done. We knew when we had done something wrong simply by the look in her eyes. We knew that we wanted nothing more than to please her. We knew that there was no greater joy than making her proud.

It wasn't the lemonade stand on that patch of grass. It was the thousands of lemonade stands that were built on the bedtime stories told, the menus for meals, the oversized shirts. It was the trips taken to ride the train at the zoo, or the tram at the airport, or the log ride at Six Flags. It was the hidden Easter eggs and the kites flown and the sausage and cherries drowning in sweet sauce at Christmas. It was the pineapple sandwiches and ambrosia.

She's 91 years old and still building us lemonade stands. Yesterday, as I left my grandmother's home for the airport, she handed us a sack lunch that she and my mom had prepared. It had a sandwich, cookies, a banana, and some trail mix. "You don't need to pay for snacks on the plane" she said.

Perfect strangers still clamor to meet her when she's out in public, hugging her neck, moved to tears simply to have met her. She's still the humble servant, the meek minister, the matriarch, the queen, gran, and yes, still the lemonade stand builder.

It's been a while since the last lemonade stand. But from this day forward, each time I see that patch of grass, and my mind's eye recalls that distant yesteryear, I’ll be reminded how my Gran built us a thousand lemonade stands each day by the things she did for us, and continues to this day to do for us.
And the lemonade stand always - always- stood for us.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

For a moment let’s forget that, during an interview in 1977,
Ted Nugent told a reporter that he took drugs and deliberately shit himself and
didn’t bathe and faked passing out while giving blood all in an effort to dodge
the draft. After all, Ted has since recanted his story and said the real reason
he dodged the draft was a student deferment. Let’s take him at his word. I
mean, who hasn’t made up a story about shitting their pants when discussing the
draft at least once in their life?

And let’s forget,
for just a moment, that Ted has a thing for young girls. Like really, really
young. Let’s forget that he has basically admitted to pedophilia and statutory
rape. After all, he’s a warm blooded, American male and he has urges. He’s the Nuge,
baby!

Finally let’s forget that he told the Detroit Free Press “Apartheid isn't that cut and
dry. All men are not created equal. The preponderance of South Africa is a
different breed of man ... They still put bones in their noses, they still walk
around naked, they wipe their butts with their hands ...These are different
people. You give 'em toothpaste, they fucking eat it.” And in the same interview,
defended his frequent use of the n word.

Forget all of that and instead travel with me, if you will,
to the Summer of 2000. I was 23 years old living in Fort Worth, Texas. My job
at the time was a dream job for someone like me. I produced book signings and
in store events for Barnes & Noble.
Some five months later I would
be promoted to do the same thing in New York City.

One day I was
sitting in my boss’ office when a call
came through for me. “Mr. McDonald, I’m calling on behalf of Ted Nugent and was
curious if you would be interested in hosting a signing for Ted and his book,
God, Guns & Rock’N’Roll. Ted will be
in Fort Worth for a concert with KISS
and would love to be able connect with his fans in a way that he can’t
on stage” said his publicist or manager.

“I’m sure that would be ok. I would need to check with our
corporate office in New York but I don’t think it would…”

“No need. We already checked with them and they said it
would be ok. So can we count on you, Mr. McDonald?”

“Well then I suspect corporate will call me soon and let me
know. Usually I can ok these sorts of things without their input but given the
book and Mr. Nugent’s recent comments at concerts, I really need to get the
green light from them before I commit to anything”

“Great. It’s set. August 23rd. It will have to be
in the afternoon since the concert is at night. We will do publicity on our end
and expect you will do the same”

“Actually, I don’t think you understand. I can’t do anything
until New York tells me, via email or a phone call, that we can host. And I’ve not heard
from them yet“ I said.

I called New York and, just as I thought, no one had heard
from Nugent’s reps. However they did give me the go ahead and we moved forward.

The day of the signing I showed up at the store in downtown
Fort Worth and there were people who had camped out overnight for the signing.
I had called my counterparts from all over North Texas as back up and had 17
booksellers assigned to the signing, an unheard of amount for signings.

Nugent arrived with his gorgeous wife and his equally
gorgeous son, who said he was a model, but who the hell knows. I briefed Nugent
on how the signing would transpire. He was friendly enough but wasn’t really
paying attention. Nonetheless I explained how there would be a press conference
and then we would move to the signing. Since there was no room for several
television cameras upstairs where the signing would take place, I explained
that the conference would take place by the newsstand downstairs. So far, so
good.

At this point I should point out that just a few months
prior to the signing, Ted had received a lot of heat for some comments he made
concerning the English language. Specifically, he said at a concert, “If you
can’t speak English, get the fuck out of America.” Rumor was that this nearly
caused riots and the mayor of San Antonio or Houston or some other large Texas
metropolis banned Nugent from ever playing in their city again

.

However, what he said coupled with what I had read and
studied about Nugent left me with a sick feeling for ever agreeing to host a
man that stood for everything I was against. But I had a job to do and I just
wanted to get it over with. That didn’t mean that I wasn’t going to have some
fun while I was at it.

The press conference was well underway when his wife ran up
to me, visibly upset. “Why is he giving this press conference in front of the
Mexican books?’

What?” I replied, smiling on the inside. You see, I deliberately
placed Nugent on front of the Libros En Espanol section, so that every camera
shot was forced to capture the signage right above Nugent’s shoulder.

“He’s in front of the Mexican books! Why?” she persisted.

“Oh, well that was pretty much the only place where we had
room. The newsstand area is open and there is ample room for the cameras. It
just so happens that that is where the Libros En Espanol section is. Sorry.”

On the elevator ride to the signing, his son told his father.
Nugent didn’t care.

When we arrived at the receiving area, one of my
counterparts who was also a gay man and close friend paged me. I had assigned
him to the front door of the store.

“Jon-Marc, there are people out here that want to bring in
guns and antlers! What do I tell them?” Christopher said.

“Guns? They’re bringing in guns?” I said certain I had heard wrong.

“AND ANTLERS!” Christopher exclaimed.

“I’ll be right down” I said as I hurried downstairs before
the signing started to see what was going on.

Sure enough, people were stretched down the block and many
had guns, antlers and other things they wanted Nugent to sign.

“Will he sign my breast?” a woman screamed from down the
line.

Poor Christopher. He was the one that had to tell them not
to bring in the guns and antlers and, sure enough, they were pissed.

The signing got underway and it was something to behold. It
was by far the largest signing I had hosted up to that point in time. Hundreds
of people bought books and hundreds more brought posters and records and CDs
and some even managed to sneak in their guns. And the woman who wanted her
breast signed, well, she got it signed.

When it was all said and done, I felt as though we had made
it through relatively unscathed. I was relieved and ready to put it behind me.
The Nuge had other plans.

The next day while I was working on an event report about
the signing, I received a call from a bookseller telling me Nugent and his wife
were in the café part of the store. I rushed downstairs, wondering why they
were back.

One of the store managers went with me and, interestingly,
we found the Nugents at the newsstand, perusing magazines.

“Hey Ted, how’s it going? How was the concert?” I asked,
unsure of what exactly I was doing.

“It was great. We’re just here relaxing. Getting some fresh
air out of the hotel” he replied.

“Great. How long are you in town?”

At this point the store manager piped up. “Have you had a
chance to explore downtown?” she asked.

“You know”, Nugent replied, “what I don’t understand is
homosexuals. I mean I feel bad for innocent kids who get AIDS, but homosexuals
deserve it. We should send all homosexuals to an island. Let em die off in a
few years’ time from AIDS and not being able to reproduce.”

I was stunned! I was absolutely speechless and stunned. The
non sequitur was one thing, but the bile that he spewed was so gross, so
upsetting, so dangerous, that for one of the few times in my life up to that
point, I felt physically threatened. And, for the first time in my life, I
looked into someone’s eyes and I knew what it was like to look at evil.

“Well, Ted, I’ve got to get back to work. Have a great day”
I said as I walked away.

As I made it back to my office I was ashamed. I was ashamed
that I didn’t have the courage to stand up and say something in the face of
such evil. Instead I cowered and slunk away. And I vowed that I would never,
ever stay silent again. And I won’t

That’s why Ted Nugent being invited to the State of The
Union matters. It matters because this man represents everything that goes
against the very thing this country stands for. And the fact that an elected
official in our government invited him is so disturbing, it literally makes me
sick to my stomach.

I will never forget looking into Ted Nugent’s eyes that day.
I will never forget how I felt when I didn’t speak up. I will never not speak
up again.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Four years ago I didn't know what was wrong with Ric. All I knew was that the man I loved beyond life itself was slipping beyond the reach of life and there was seemingly nothing I could do about it. As his decline accelerated and hope all but disappeared I had resigned myself to the fact that this elusive foe, whatever it was, would claim him within weeks. Today, the man that four years ago I had turned over to the care of God with the certainty of his imminent demise, laughed. He laughed so hard that he couldn't stop. The kind of gasp-for-your-breath, belly-ache laugh that is so genuine it makes all other laughter seem counterfeit. In this season of great expectation and anticipation, I am grateful beyond all words for the sound of unadulterated, unrestrained, joyful, hopeful, boundless laughter!